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    Home Authors Posts by Jason Keyser

    Jason Keyser

    Bill Ford gets help shoveling the sidewalk by his 3-year-old son, Bray, during a winter storm that came through the area in Monona, Wis., Tuesday, March 5, 2013. (AP Photo/Wisconsin State Journal/Amber Arnold)
    News

    Snow storm barrels through Midwest to Mid-Atlantic

    Don Babwin, Jason Keyser -
    March 5, 2013 5:00 am
    0
    FILE - In this Oct. 19, 2012 file photo, Gov. Pat Quinn, left, U.S. Transportation Sec. Ray LaHood, center, and Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., celebrate in Pontiac, Ill., after the Amtrak train they are riding reached 110 mph during a test run between Pontiac and Dwight, Ill. Hundreds of Midwest manufacturers stand to benefit from a web of high-speed passenger rail routes emerging from Chicago's rail hub, according to a report released by an environmental policy group that has fought to defend the use of billions in taxpayer money on such projects. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast, File)
    News

    Report: Midwest firms coupled to high-speed rail

    Jason Keyser -
    February 9, 2013 5:00 am
    0
    18 heads found at airport were sent for cremation
    News

    18 heads found at airport were sent for cremation

    Jason Keyser -
    January 15, 2013 9:13 pm
    0
    FILE - This undated file photo provided by the Illinois Lottery shows Urooj Khan, 46, of Chicago's West Rogers Park neighborhood, posing with a winning instant lottery ticket. On Friday, Jan 11, 2013, a Cook County judge granted authorities permission to exhume the body of the Chicago lottery winner who was fatally poisoned with cyanide just as he was about to collect his $425,000 payout. His July 20 death was initially ruled a result of natural causes. (AP Photo/Illinois Lottery, File)
    News

    Family quarrels add intrigue to lotto winner death

    Jason Keyser -
    January 12, 2013 5:00 am
    0
    This undated photo provided by the Illinois Lottery shows Urooj Khan, 46, of Chicago's West Rogers Park neighborhood, posing with a winning lottery ticket. The Cook County medical examiner said Monday, Jan. 7, 2013, that Khan was fatally poisoned with cyanide July 20, 2012, a day after he collected nearly $425,000 in lottery winnings. (AP Photo/Illinois Lottery)
    Crime

    Chicago lottery winner died from cyanide poisoning

    Jason Keyser -
    January 7, 2013 5:00 am
    0
      In this photo taken Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012, at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, a waiter delivers plates of fresh sushi at Wicker Park Seafood & Sushi in Terminal 2. Getting stranded at an airport once meant camping on the floor and enduring hours of boredom in a kind of travel purgatory with nothing to eat but fast food. Tough economic times are helping drive airports to make amends and transform terminals with a bit of bliss: spas, yoga studios, luxury shopping and restaurant menus crafted by celebrity chefs. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

    Airports trade layover horror for ‘terminal bliss’

    Jason Keyser -
    December 24, 2012 6:26 pm
    0
      In this photo taken Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012, at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, a waiter delivers plates of fresh sushi at Wicker Park Seafood & Sushi in Terminal 2. Getting stranded at an airport once meant camping on the floor and enduring hours of boredom in a kind of travel purgatory with nothing to eat but fast food. Tough economic times are helping drive airports to make amends and transform terminals with a bit of bliss: spas, yoga studios, luxury shopping and restaurant menus crafted by celebrity chefs. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)
    News

    Airports trade layover horror for ‘terminal bliss’

    Jason Keyser -
    December 23, 2012 4:03 pm
    0
      This 2006 photo provided by Boeing Co. shows early dielectric substitution testing using potatoes in a Boeing Test & Evaluation laboratory in Arizona. Boeing has developed an advanced method to test wireless signals in airplane cabins, making it possible for passengers to enjoy more reliable connectivity when using networked personal electronic devices in the air. Employing an odd mix of the low-tech and the high-tech, Boeing loaded a plane with sacks of potatoes as part of testing it did to eliminate weak spots in in-flight wireless signals. Engineers determined radio waves bounce off the spuds much the same way they do with human bodies. Thus, the aircraft maker’s researchers were able to spare people from having to sit motionless for many hours while data was collected. (AP Photo/Courtesy of Boeing Co.)
    News

    Boeing engineers use spuds to improve in-air Wi-Fi

    Jason Keyser -
    December 22, 2012 5:00 am
    0
    Economy makes for tougher Thanksgiving journeys
    News

    Economy makes for tougher Thanksgiving journeys

    Jason Keyser -
    November 21, 2012 5:00 am
    0
    Prosecutor: Embezzlement plea a warning to others
    News

    Prosecutor: Embezzlement plea a warning to others

    Jason Keyser -
    November 14, 2012 5:00 am
    0
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